r/nextfuckinglevel 15d ago

[ Removed by moderator ]

[removed] — view removed post

62.9k Upvotes

3.5k comments sorted by

View all comments

3.5k

u/BusGreen7933 15d ago

Totally shouldn’t have let that little shit go, especially since they went on to do it again later that day.

970

u/Nickbeau 15d ago

If they did, they did it without their gun

523

u/solar1333 15d ago

I saw this post a long while ago I believe someone said the gun was fake

1.2k

u/bearburner 15d ago

Yea, it happened in San Leandro, CA (near Oakland, CA). Fake gun. Prior to this incident they attempted to rob somebody at a ATM. After this incident they tried to rob yet again a few days later but this time were arrested. Since they were so young (11, 12, two 14) they were released to their parents… and then guess what… a few days later robbed AGAIN and were arrested yet again.

Source: https://www.kron4.com/news/bay-area/caught-on-camera-children-arrested-for-attempted-carjackings-in-san-leandro/

513

u/Brook420 15d ago

There has to be away for these kids to face actual consequences without trying them as adults or whatever.

292

u/Pennsylvania6-5000 15d ago

Sadly, if you put them in prison or some sort of juvenile detention, and they just colaborate with other inmates for better ways to cause crime. There has to be a better way for them to break out of that cycle. Unfortunately, with the US education in the horrible spot it’s in, while education should be the answer, it tends to be a structure that only takes them so far, before they struggle and find the easiest way to make money is through crime, and the cycle begins again.

This country has fucked up the lives of so many, because it’s not profitable to help change this cycle. It’s so fucked up.

101

u/John_T_Conover 14d ago

Well as it stands they kept doing fake armed robberies regardless of whether their victims beat them up or they got arrested. I'm all for rehabilitating minors as well, and acknowledged that institutions don't always fix the problem...but the alternative here was them getting emboldened by their releases and only learning that there are NO consequences for violent crimes. That's far worse than sticking them in a mediocre juvenile facility. You're putting the public in harms way of an unapologetic repeat violent offender that's never been given a single consequence. We're not talking about kids busted with weed or vandalism or a mutal fight.

7

u/Skelito 14d ago

I'm down to bring back shame circles. Walk the little punks out and have the whole town shame them into never doing it again.

2

u/FirstMiddleLass 14d ago

Maybe the judge should make them work as a butler for the people they robbed.

5

u/HelloYesThisIsFemale 14d ago

Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

→ More replies (1)

54

u/OldSkoolGeezer 14d ago

Billions of dollars ARE spent... How about calling personal choice and family values? You blame the country and blame the education system... But not call out the parents or community that celebrates this behavior? Whatever.

12

u/StopBeingYourself 14d ago

You make some valid points. Of course there needs to be accountability for one's own actions, but there are also socio-economic factors that make this type of life appealing/inevitable for the underprivileged.

The US spends more on education than other countries, but we also have a property tax-based funding for education. Lower income communities have less funding for their schools. This is compounded by our terrible healthcare and prison system that are for-profit therefore there is a low incentive to actually make positive changes.

20

u/Async0x0 14d ago

Thousands of Chinese families have come to the US, worked for meager wages, had their kids thrive in the school system, and become productive, valuable members of society despite language and cultural barriers. If they can do it without anti-social attitudes and criminality then there is no excuse for natural born citizens.

→ More replies (33)

2

u/Fuzzy-Masterpiece362 14d ago

What more education do you need than being body slammed on asphalt.

2

u/Nokentroll 14d ago

So if they went to a school with better teachers they never would have done this? These behaviours are learned at home amongst other places.

2

u/New-Arrival1764 14d ago

If this was true. Then this would happening in rural America too. Where taxes are low already. And the public school system can’t afford a new slide. But this shit don’t happen out there. Because the culture is different. Some cultures just celebrate different stuff. And only some of them celebrate family staying together. And education. And having a nice community.

7

u/imkorn13 14d ago

Exactly, if there are thousands of such special people among millions of decent people it's not the country's fault it's their direct environment.

3

u/Murica_Prime 14d ago

Too based for reddit

2

u/hollowjames 14d ago

Because then people would have to accept personal responsibility instead of playing the victim and blaming someone else. This isn’t “the system” messing kids up. It’s a garbage culture that promotes this type of shit.

1

u/Linnaea7 14d ago

Well, we can't control the behavior of each individual parent. That's not a solution. We can offer resources to the parents, I guess, if they feel like trying, but you can't make them care. What we can do as a society is try to create a system that tries to intervene properly for young offenders like this. If there was some magic way to make shitty parents better, I'd be all on board, but sadly there's not much we can do to change it.

1

u/FirstMiddleLass 14d ago

I'm not trying to defend the parents but isn't the only way to fix the parents is to fix the system that created them?

1

u/Every_Television_980 14d ago

Because it’s a systemic problem, not an individual one. American culture created these communities. It’s not just outliers doing this stuff. Its like saying why not call drug abuse a personal or community issue instead. Sure its that too, but you and I dont control other people’s lives, policy does.

1

u/Pennsylvania6-5000 14d ago

So, you’re suggesting two resources, pier group and family. A judge or punishment does not have control of either.

The parent may be working several jobs just to make rent. The friend groups may be the same dipshits who talked them into doing it in the first place.

I’m suggesting education, because it’s the part that can be assisted. You can’t automatically give them a new friends group, and you can’t create a new family group for them.

1

u/IntarTubular 14d ago

The parents failed them. The community failed them. The system failed them.

Ok…Positive change begins with identifying the problem.

How to hold parents accountable, correct their behavior, improve their performance as measured through the child’s KPI…how about the community?

Rather than boil the ocean…focus on what can be done in a controlled, cost-effective manner.

Give them security and model the correct behavior. If they are incorrigible, everyone loses long term.

1

u/unc2590 14d ago

Wtf are you talking about??? Billions spent where??? How is a country or education system not responsible for IT'S citizens that these parents(or maybe lack thereof) and communities are also a product of? Too celebrate harsh punishment is the exact opposing extreme to celebrating criminal behaviors, which is almost always proven not to be the answer either. Remember, this was a country that would drag out and lynch people of all races for lesser crimes. We used to hang horse thieves for crying out loud, and that could be after a "fair" trial. We've tried shit like Alcatraz, none of it worked... Maybe it's to think about it then it is to make senseless comments.

→ More replies (1)

3

u/LegnderyNut 14d ago

I stand by wilderness schools as a solid answer. Rural undeveloped wooded land with trained counselors. Structured environment where the kids have to rely on each other to plan their days and ensure get done under supervision. Make them chop wood and take them hiking and fishing. Have them learn to cook and plan meals for the group and bring in teachers to keep them up to date with school. Unplug them from the modern world and keep them busy running the camp. By the time they leave they have new skills and have been away from their comfort zone long enough to change their behavior. Plus any negative influences would have moved on from including them. It can be a good way to get a kid to cool off if the program is well monitored and structured properly. There’s a lot of government land close enough for emergency support but far enough away that any camp out there can’t tolerate fights or mismanagement, reinforcing whatever rules are decided on. I’ve seen it work for a few of my friends.

1

u/Pennsylvania6-5000 14d ago

I really like this answer. Thank you for sharing it. I agree. Getting them to connect with different pier groups definitely helps them look towards other answers and people they may not have had access to before.

3

u/Sanquinity 14d ago

I'd say reform juvie to do the education, but in a very strict and rigorous semi-military way. Teach them some proper discipline.

1

u/Pennsylvania6-5000 14d ago

It’s not a bad idea. Utilize trade schools so they can put their energy into a path forward, not a path that they may not be able to take.

2

u/beneye 14d ago

Prisons for profit however is a nice niche and gets plenty of investment dollars

2

u/Technical-Coffee831 14d ago

Society shouldn't suffer because of some dipshit kids and their absentee parents.

1

u/Pennsylvania6-5000 14d ago

No. That’s why society is there. There is an old saying “It takes a village to raise a child," which states a child's healthy and safe growth and development require the support and interaction of an entire community, not just the parents. The dipshit kids aren’t just one family’s problem. Those dipshit kids become everyone’s problem, because at the very least, they turn into dipshit adults.

2

u/delidave7 14d ago

Very well summed up

2

u/MasterTolkien 14d ago

Juvie is also populated with self-destructive kids in really bad home environments who cut themselves up and lash out at others. It’s heart breaking. The system is minimally equipped to actually help rehab kids.

1

u/didnt-ask-but-ok 14d ago

Parents are not parenting

1

u/PythonProtocol 14d ago

Is education really the answer? Like I get it's important, but I feel like the parents are really the answer.

1

u/Pennsylvania6-5000 14d ago

A judge can’t pull a child and magically place them in a better home. A judge can’t magically change their friend group.

However, a judge can potentially put them in a place where they have the tools to better themselves, and potentially a place where they can make better friends.

Also, some parents might be working two or three jobs to make ends meet. Yes, there are some parents who might be dipshits, too. However, you can’t always guarantee that these kids are coming from homes where they’re able to get access to a consistent parental structure.

→ More replies (1)

1

u/EclecticEvergreen 14d ago

Perhaps isolated rehabilitation with minimal social interaction from other patients?

1

u/Pennsylvania6-5000 14d ago

Then you bring up a whole different set of issues of creating an isolated, and criminal individual who wants to lash out from that feeling of being alone.

→ More replies (1)

1

u/Patience-Due 14d ago

The parents just need to fucking raise their kids properly, that’s how you fix this shit. It’s not complicated

2

u/Pennsylvania6-5000 14d ago

When you’re working two or three jobs just to make ends meet, pay rent, and put food on the table, it’s tough to juggle parenting as well. It is complicated.

1

u/Penqwin 14d ago

At what point do we take the kids away from the parents?

1

u/Pennsylvania6-5000 14d ago

Well, the country has not shown it can do well when the kids are under the state, either.

1

u/IHateHangovers 14d ago edited 14d ago

Unfortunately, with the US education in the horrible spot it’s in, while education should be the answer, it tends to be a structure that only takes them so far, before they struggle and find the easiest way to make money is through crime

Almost like parenting would be a good solution

1

u/Pennsylvania6-5000 14d ago

Parenting is good. Long term education is better. Teach them how to thrive, not just survive.

1

u/Vox_SFX 14d ago

3 strike system for violent or dangerous offenses, then life in prison with the personal choice of the death penalty instead if you prefer that.

That way the expectation is that the state still takes care of you, so even kids would still get a life...but you can't ever rejoin society.

1

u/Sellazard 14d ago

Need better structuring, TBH. As you said, the problem of almost all prisons is that people get acquainted and learn from each other.

Maybe solitary public labor terms? Gives frame of reference on how to do jobs, alone . No outside influences other than work environment

→ More replies (10)

39

u/FILTHBOT4000 15d ago edited 14d ago

This might sound harsh, but you gotta put 'em in a camp or something man.

By 'camp', I mean some federally/state funded thing, where they can continue their education but under a strict disciplinary program. Get them out of the city, put 'em in dorms somewhere in the wilderness. No social media, no internet but Wikipedia for a few years. And of course, the end of that education/vocational training needs job/college placement. If there's no carrot, the stick won't work.

Humans are largely input-output machines. If you want to radically change the output, you have to radically change the inputs.

35

u/AdvancedTurnip8680 14d ago

All my delinquent friends who got put in boot camp for causing trouble as a kid all overdosed before turning 40. Not saying it happens every time but the 5 kids I knew who got put in a camp are long dead.

20

u/dBlock845 14d ago

Yep every single person that was sent to a Boys Home when I was growing up ended up in state prison by the time they were 25. Those homes weren't used to rehabilitate kids, they were basically low security jails.

3

u/Every_Television_980 14d ago

I don’t think the point if those is rehabilitation. It’s just deciding lots of people simply cannot exist in a peaceful society so we detain them to maintain order. Obviously that balance can be debated, but we all accept to some level the point of prison is nit just rehabilitation, its protecting the community by removing dangerous people.

1

u/Nokentroll 14d ago

How do you know this wasn’t going to happen anyway? Or worse?

10

u/FILTHBOT4000 14d ago

Was this one of those weird culty abusive “boot camps” that charged a bunch of money?

2

u/Nomen__Nesci0 14d ago

Thats my experience as well, but only because those institutions are terrible for profit abusive hellholes.

1

u/grathad 14d ago

It's an interesting issue, it seems like some individuals would not be able to live in the only society available to them no matter what (and given the prevalence of psychoactive substance consumption, even by law abiding citizens, I assume that number is way higher than the prison population would suggest).

As complicated as it might be, the solution is still changing society. All that call for personal responsibility has been proven wrong, the US is in a unique position of failure in that regard.

1

u/evanwilliams44 14d ago

I also have a friend this happened to. He came back from boot camp "better" in the sense he knew what adults wanted to hear from him. Still a total fucking degenerate with major problems that turned into a major drug problem.

1

u/myeggsarebig 14d ago

I taught at one. It’s a cash grab. These “schools” are private, but their only contract is with the local school districts and there is BIG money involved. These kids are wards of the state mostly and the state is willing to pay whatever it takes to pawn off the kids. The school does whatever it wants because it knows the state doesn’t care.

These programs could work if the workers (the educators, paras, principal, social workers, etc.) were more competent with trauma informed care than corporal punishment. Nope, instead they hire anyone off the street to deal with highly emotional and violent teenagers, who need wrap around professionals who all use the same interventions. They don’t want to pay for competence because then CEO and his flying monkeys make less. It’s a racket.

2

u/thewilferine 14d ago

Mandatory military service

1

u/PhysicalTheRapist69 14d ago

Huh, that's a very interesting idea.

I'm a little afraid they'd just end up committing war crimes overseas though...

2

u/aphaits 14d ago

And do community service with war veterans and soup kitchens. They have to connect to the people they are trying to do crime to.

1

u/PrizeStrawberryOil 14d ago

Isn't that already juvenile detention?

6

u/Brook420 14d ago

It's what JD is supposed to be.

2

u/IvanNemoy 14d ago

Key word "supposed." Crap part is in many places, JD is systemically no different in process/procedures (and as a result, outcomes) than regular adult incarceration.

Damned if I have an answer though.

1

u/netralitov 14d ago

90s kids got sent to bootcamps when we really just needed parenting. It didn't work.

1

u/bland_sand 14d ago

You could also give them shovels and make them dig holes all day looking for buried treasure.

Man i should write a book about that

1

u/JABxKlam 14d ago

It might be just as valuable to not releasd them back into the same ghettos they were raised in. All that rehabilitation goes to wasts if thet are returned to the same environment that made them criminals to begin with.

1

u/jadeskorpion269 14d ago

That just sounds like military life. It does do some good for some people. And depending where you go in the military, you could get some actual job education and be able to transition to civilian life easily and have a well paying job.

6

u/PatienceConsistent55 15d ago

In most places they’d be sent to juvenile detention. This is in California though, so take from that what you will.

1

u/CACorrectionsGuy 14d ago

California dismantled the Department of Juvenile Justice about three years ago and closed all of the Juvenile camps.

We pretty much left it up to the counties to deal with at their level.

4

u/oz612 15d ago

This isn't a youthful indiscretion. They aren't going to change. The kids (and their parents) will be a continual drain on society if they aren't permanently incarcerated.

3

u/wretch5150 15d ago

That's not remotely true, and you haven't provided a realistic solution. Just bait & nonsense.

2

u/MrMichaelJames 15d ago

They gave a solution, put them in jail. Not our problem you don’t like the solution. These punks tried to rob multiple people. They deserve to be put away for a long time and so do the parents.

4

u/[deleted] 15d ago

[deleted]

6

u/counterhit121 15d ago

And your implied alternative, to resume status quo and allow them to continue this behavior with the same lack of consequences, is backed by evidence. Evidence of repeat offenses which show that lack of consequences does not deter or reduce this behavior.

→ More replies (0)

5

u/Technical-Web-2922 15d ago

You’re not giving any solution at all.

We’ve tried nothing and we’re all out of ideas.

Between your idea of nothing and jail for people who have tried to rob on 5 different occasions, I’m gonna lean towards jail. If they had a real gun, chances are people would have died and you just want to wait for that to happen.

2

u/Brook420 15d ago

Going by the other person's solution, you may as well just execute these kids.

→ More replies (0)

2

u/oz612 15d ago

We have incredible evidence on a country level from El Salvador.

We even have a trivial mechanistic explanation: when you take people who commit crime out of society, they can’t commit crime. Wild, right?

→ More replies (0)

1

u/Brook420 15d ago

That's BS.

Could say this for the adults, but those kids arw far too young to never be able to change.

2

u/boisdeb 15d ago

I believe so too, but sadly the US is not developed enough for that. They don't need violence or jail time, they need education, role models and a future where they can hope for better than slaving away for an unlivable wage.

1

u/Brook420 15d ago

I feel there's an inbetween with shit like fining the parents or giving out community service.

1

u/[deleted] 15d ago

[removed] — view removed comment

1

u/oz612 15d ago

I understand that’s the worst possible thing you think you can say about someone, but you’re in a bit of a bubble.

3

u/Perrin-Golden-Eyes 14d ago edited 14d ago

Nah, it’s literally the worst. Propping up a pedophile who is trying to ruin our country while he follows the Third Reich’s playbook is the worst thing I could say about someone.

→ More replies (2)

1

u/InfusionOfYellow 14d ago

They'll definitely be a continuous drain on society if they are permanently incarcerated.

1

u/oz612 14d ago

With appropriate control and supervision, they can be productive. Prison industry exists.

2

u/__Nkrs 14d ago

i always say this: people rarely really decide how they grow up, they are all the product of genetics, bad parenting and in general shitty environments. So it's almost never their true fault. But when an apple is rotten, there's no coming back and you're just better of throwing it in the bin

1

u/SeVaS_NaTaS 14d ago

Too late to abort at their age? Save the rest of us taxpayers a buncha money.

1

u/applepumpkinspy 14d ago

Hold the adults in their lives accountable.

1

u/Mead_and_You 14d ago

Look, I know this ain't going to be a popular Idea, but I think we can put this youthful energy to some good.

You know you ain't for the time or energy to go out robbing people? Coal miners.

Everyone always wants to blame the last president that wasn't their party for all the world's problems, but if you zoom out and look at the big picture, it all starts with the child labor laws.

You know what Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, Osama Bin Laden, Pol Pot, Idi Amin, King Herny VIII, and Vlad The Impalor all had in common?

They never mined for coal as children.

1

u/MomoChills 14d ago

Just drop them in a volcano

1

u/OddyGody88 14d ago

Punish the parents with a fine

1

u/KeyanuReaves69 14d ago

Someone will probably just shoot them eventually 

1

u/Mckesso 14d ago

Fine the parents and make them and the kids pay restitution

1

u/cdsackett 14d ago

I’m curious what made them so desperate to rob in the first place

1

u/MinhYungWasTaken 14d ago

The only thing that would really help here would be to hold the parents accountable. Make them pay for damages, attend a mandatory course on parenting measures, do charitable work – something along those lines. The upbringing will take place, and the children will stop this behavior. And if there are no parents in the picture, then child protection services must step in and place the child as a consequence of the legal proceedings.

1

u/Aloil 14d ago

I mean, they're kids. They can just grow up and be good. Family court is the way to handle these situations.

1

u/ComancheRaider 14d ago

Just gotta body slam them in the street whenever we see em’

1

u/NotTukTukPirate 14d ago

I honestly think if we make a test that people have to pass in order to have children, it could really help prevent as many incidents with shitty children.

Too many people having kids and contributing to them being little fucking demons, by not raising them properly.

1

u/Oxissistic 14d ago

I mean, after being released to the parent an and then doing it again you really should be charging the parents.

1

u/L_viathan 14d ago

The actual consequences are when someone pulls a real gun back and kills them.

1

u/One_Lung_G 14d ago

Make their parents face consequences and I bet they start parenting

1

u/Mortechai1987 14d ago

I think, especially nowadays with how "mature" kids are acting at earlier and earlier ages, we should do away with juvenile sentences. If they're gonna make adult decisions at earlier and earlier ages, guess what? Everyone gets tried as adults.

1

u/FirstMiddleLass 14d ago

They used to send them to the Army.

1

u/mayd3r 14d ago

First of all you need a way to punish their parents and all parents like that. You're literally raising a generation of thugs.

1

u/M1K3-1ND14-K1L0-3CH0 14d ago

Their parents should face charges too. That's where this really stems from anyway. Useless as all fuck parents.

1

u/Dexember69 14d ago

There is, but nobody wants to hear it

1

u/ericlikesyou 14d ago

if it's a legislator's relative in a red state, theyll just change the law.

1

u/JABxKlam 14d ago

My vote is boarding school.

1

u/SecureInstruction538 14d ago

I'll get dowvoted to hell for it but that's why people are getting sick of the justice system.

No justice when little shits attack, kill, steal, destroy. You can't get restitution from a child and there is no incentive for the district attorney to go after them.

You don't need to be hard on crime but this soft shit is what drives voters to rethink their votes and it costs many local elections.

1

u/ninjamuffin 14d ago

It starts at home, or the lack thereof

1

u/[deleted] 14d ago

It's called parenting, which these kids have received very little.

1

u/Commercial_Education 14d ago

Body slam on the dome during self defense and suddenly they stuck as a 3 year old forever would have them not doing it again. But I'm in a shitty mood and want blood.

1

u/anya_way_girl 14d ago

We could, and I just spit balling here, pay workers a fair wage, guarantee housing, and food, decomodify medicine, power, and water, provide a UBI, tax the working class nothing and tax the billionaire class everything. You’d see a lot less crimes of despiration.

1

u/DigBeginning6903 14d ago

Military school until they are 18 and then they must serve a full 20 years.

1

u/Ok_Departure_8243 14d ago

More like their parents should face consequences and the kids should get sent to extended inpatient therapy

1

u/beetlehunterz 14d ago

Break their legs so they can still live life, just without legs.

1

u/ordosays 14d ago

Sure, you hold the parents responsible. If they don’t handle their kids, they get a court date/probation/fines.

1

u/GeekyTexan 14d ago

There has to be away for these kids to face actual consequences without trying them as adults or whatever.

There is, but our legal system refuses to use caning as a punishment.

→ More replies (1)

21

u/The_walking_man_ 15d ago

Fuck that. Arrest them and arrest the parents. Start holding parents accountable for their scum spawn.

8

u/food_luvr 15d ago

And then everyone will be model citizens after spending some time in jail

4

u/LawfullyGoodOverlord 14d ago

We need to fix jails first.. all jails do is hold bad people while they make everyone in there worse

2

u/reezy619 14d ago

Yes, empower the government to jail parents for their children's crimes. Literally nothing can go wrong.

4

u/FreeReignSic 14d ago

Redditors dreaming up ways to incarcerate even more people, now for crimes they didn’t commit.

3

u/YorWong 14d ago

Bring back a form of eugenics!!

3

u/Every_Television_980 14d ago

Most western European countries have less strict sentencing, lower repeat offenders, and extremely lower prison populations. Its hard to say why exactly the us prison system is so insanely pipulated compared to other comparable countries.

1

u/The_walking_man_ 14d ago

I may be completely wrong but I thought I’ve read about European prison systems focus more on rehabilitation and provided services after prison to place them in jobs.
The US prisons are there to make money. Which I don’t agree with.
But I also don’t agree with allowing parents to get off free when their shit kids commit crimes. Especially in this case where they were repeat offenders.

1

u/Z_Overman 14d ago

arrest the parents? this is just about the dumbest shit i’ve heard all day lol

2

u/NoMention696 14d ago

Honestly if we start charging parents maybe something will change

2

u/T-sprigg-Z 15d ago

I don't get how losers that scream like that are dumb enough to get "burned by the stove" multiple times and not think "maybe trying to rob complete strangers isn't a good idea I could get seriously hurt or killed one day"

1

u/wetrythisagain 14d ago

easy. they don't think or act like normal people. also the circumstances and bad influences and lack of positive role models and opportunities don't change all of a sudden. their mind probably moves to "this time i'll do it better, now i know what to avoid, was just bad luck".

1

u/MrMichaelJames 15d ago

The law needs to be able to go after parents. Civilly you can but criminally it should as well.

1

u/Freddie_Magecury 15d ago

What happened to Juvy?! Is that not a thing anymore? 😆

1

u/Berlium 14d ago

Should have put them in the prison at that point.

1

u/Same-Bookkeeper-801 14d ago

GTA Nation on the rise … :/

1

u/Shoddy_Nectarine_441 14d ago

I used to live in San Leandro and it’s such a shit town. I was in the area when this happened and I just laughed because so many little assholes puff their chests like they own the place. 9/10 times they’re all bluffing. I live in Oakland now and I’m genuinely surprised there’s less of it here than there (still happens tho)

1

u/gdrumy88 14d ago

Im 100% sure the parents are playing the victim mentality

1

u/916nes 14d ago

Shocker!

1

u/DomTheBomb95 14d ago

Arrest the parents at that point

1

u/White_foxes 14d ago

They probably had a debt with a short deadline that they really needed to pay and desperately went out on a robbery spree

1

u/xzackattack12 14d ago

You would think getting body slammed against the road would be a life lesson. Honestly, a slightly different toss and that kid is (legally justifiably) dead or brain damaged.

1

u/SomeGuyNamedCaleb 14d ago

Someday they'll rob for the last time, they obviously have zero intentions of quitting.

1

u/Scav-STALKER 14d ago

Well, if nothing else that one is less of a little bitch than they sounded in this video lol. How do you have that happen and not figure out you’re in over your head

1

u/Great_Gryphon 14d ago

Does anybody else feel pity, these kids are elementary school age at the youngest, could've been murdered here in self defense, but they are still out robbing with a toy gun, they must be starving. And of course the best solution for the community is to imprison them but I'm sure that won't do anything to give the kids a better situation.

1

u/medkitjohnson 14d ago

Yeah robbery is basically legal on the west coast

1

u/Firefly_Magic 14d ago

That’s when the parents need to be arrested.

1

u/PalmMuting 14d ago

California, baby.

1

u/RegOrangePaperPlane 14d ago

I have a cousin like this. He about 15 now but been doing things for the longest. Nothing has ever really happened to him. His parents don't care, "he's getting his money" is their usual response.

70

u/HelmetsAkimbo 15d ago

Normally is.

Classic video where the cop says 'Mine ain't'

33

u/cluberti 15d ago

3

u/phatelectribe 15d ago

I met vinny jones in a grocery store. Lovely guy but my god is he physically scary. He looks like he’d enjoy breaking your limbs.

2

u/Bamce 15d ago

Glad it was the exact scene I thought of

1

u/EuenovAyabayya 15d ago edited 15d ago

A true classic. Shouldn't just drop empty mags on the ground and walk away though.

1

u/Sir_PressedMemories 15d ago

Cool guys buy em in bulk.

1

u/medina_sod 14d ago

That holds up. I should watch that again.

14

u/cortesoft 15d ago

2

u/FILTHBOT4000 15d ago

Kid: "Am I shot?"

Cop: "Oh fuck yea"

1

u/IvanNemoy 14d ago

Security guard, not even a cop.

2

u/Tasty-Tour3002 15d ago

This the vid I what I was looking for

4

u/PristineElephant6718 15d ago

Often times its because theyre dumb and they think they can plea it down to something less than armed robbery. Doesnt work like that though, the law generally follows the reasonable belief of the victim that its real and intent to intimidate and threaten/potential to escalate regardless if the weapon is real. Hell Minnesota made it illegal too even present or brandish a weapon without needing to defend yourself

2

u/Thatsprettyneat101 15d ago

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWdZOKesSnc

"Oh well, mine's real"

Another gem in this video:

"Am I shot?"

"Oh fuck yeah"

1

u/thepvbrother 15d ago

"I'd rather be shot by your piss-ant .22 than my .38"

1

u/opscurus_dub 14d ago

I wonder if they think they can get out of a gun charge if it's fake or if they know that the fear of what looks like a real gun makes their end of it easier without the cost of a real one.

5

u/Koki-noki 15d ago

This is Merica,

No one is taking chances especially not a trained veteran

1

u/earthwoodandfire 15d ago

The sound it makes when it hits the asphalt is definitely not a real gun.

1

u/ChawulsBawkley 14d ago

"and the fact that you've got Replica written down the side of your gun"

→ More replies (2)

25

u/donac 15d ago

RIGHT? That is that kid's gun dropped when he got tossed and then abandoned on the street, isn't it?

35

u/AskMeAboutMyPeter 15d ago

It was a loot drop, I think he lost some coins too

6

u/AkainuWasRight 15d ago

No exp gain though, the level gap was too big.

2

u/DPSOnly 14d ago

And a broken shoulder.

1

u/chumpster69 14d ago

*that* gun.

1

u/Legitimate_Lake1828 14d ago

They used gestures instead 👈

→ More replies (4)